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Copyright © 2006 The Authors Journal compilation © 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd Ivabradine – the first selective sinus node If channel inhibitor in the treatment of stable angina Department Cardiology, London Chest Hospital, London, UK Declaration of interest: Prof. Timmis sits on the ivabradine advisory board for Servier for which he receives an honorarium. Correspondence to: Professor Adam Timmis, Department Cardiology, London Chest Hospital, London E2 9JX, UK Email: timmis/at/lch.demon.co.uk Received October 2005; Accepted December 2005. Summary Heart rate, a major determinant of angina in coronary disease, is also an important predictor of cardiovascular mortality. Lowering heart rate is therefore one of the most important therapeutic approaches in the treatment of stable angina pectoris. To date, β-blockers and some calcium-channel antagonists reduce heart rate, but their use may be limited by adverse reactions or contraindications. Heart rate is determined by spontaneous electrical pacemaker activity in the sinoatrial node controlled by the If current. Ivabradine is the first specific heart rate-lowering agent that has completed clinical development for stable angina pectoris. It is selective for the If current, lowering heart rate at concentrations that do not affect other cardiac ionic currents. Specific heart-rate lowering with ivabradine reduces myocardial oxygen demand, simultaneously improving oxygen supply. Ivabradine has no negative inotropic or lusitropic effects, preserving ventricular contractility, and does not change any major electrophysiological parameters unrelated to heart rate. Randomised clinical studies in patients with stable angina show that ivabradine effectively reduces heart rate, improves exercise capacity and reduces the number of angina attacks. It has superior anti-anginal and anti-ischaemic activity to placebo and is non-inferior to atenolol and amlodipine. Ivabradine therefore offers a valuable approach to lowering heart rate exclusively and provides an attractive alternative to conventional treatment for a wide range of patients with confirmed stable angina. Keywords: Ivabradine, heart rate, angina, If current, If channel Introduction The most prevalent cardiovascular disease in Western society is atherosclerotic coronary artery obstruction, of which angina pectoris is the primary symptom. Angina is a symptom of myocardial ischaemia, which occurs when insufficient oxygen is supplied to the heart muscle. Heart rate is a primary determinant of myocardial oxygen demand and may also affect myocardial perfusion. Lowering heart rate increases the duration of diastole relative to cardiac cycle length, allowing more time for effective left ventricular (LV) filling and coronary perfusion. Therefore, lowering the heart rate may improve both the aspects of myocardial oxygen balance. Heart rate may also be involved in the progression of atherosclerosis in patients with coronary heart disease (1). High heart rate is associated with coronary plaque disruption, independent of blood pressure, possibly as a result of increased haemodynamic stress (2). Taken together, these effects predict that lowering heart rate may improve myocardial efficiency. Role of the if Current In the normal, non-diseased state, heart rate is controlled by the sinoatrial node, the origin of cardiac pacemaker activity. Sinoatrial myocytes, the pacemaker cells in the heart, have the unique capacity to spontaneously generate slow diastolic depolarisation, driving the membrane voltage away from the hyperpolarised level reached at the completion of one action potential towards the threshold level for initiating a subsequent action potential. The rhythmic action potentials generated in this way propagate through the conducting systems of the heart and trigger myocardial contraction. Pacemaker activity involves interplay between several ionic currents that influence spontaneous diastolic depolarisation of the sinoatrial node, including the If current (20). The ‘f’ denotes ‘funny’, so called because it had unusual properties compared with other current systems known at the time of its discovery. The If current is carried by both sodium and potassium ions across the sarcolemma; it is inward at voltages in the diastolic range, is activated on hyperpolarisation (within the diastolic range of voltages regularly observed in cardiac pacemaker tissue) (21) and is characterised by unusually low single-channel conductance and slow activation kinetics. The If current is directly activated by intracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), not linked to cAMP-dependent phosphorylation activity (22) and is carried by the hyperpolarisation-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated family of ion channels (23). These form the naturally occurring If channels in cardiac pacemaker cells and the related Ih channels in certain neuronal structures. The If and Ih channels open and close in response to both ambient voltage and local intracellular cAMP concentrations. Adrenergic agonists activate adenylate cyclase, increasing local cAMP concentrations and thus increasing cAMP binding to the If channel (24). Conversely, cholinergic transmitters decrease local cAMP concentrations by inhibiting adenylate cyclase, thereby decreasing cAMP binding to the If channel. An If channel bound to cAMP is more likely to open, increasing the rate of slow diastolic depolarisation, whereas an unbound channel is more likely to remain closed, lowering the heart rate (25). Lowering the Heart Rate in Angina Lowering heart rate reduces cardiac work, thereby diminishing myocardial oxygen demand. This mechanism is the primary basis for the anti-ischaemic and anti-anginal effects of heart rate-lowering drugs. Heart-rate lowering might also increase coronary blood flow and, thus, myocardial oxygen supply, mitigating ischaemia by increasing diastolic perfusion time, during which coronary flow proceeds against relatively low resistance (26, 27). This effect is most pronounced in the highly vulnerable subendocardium, where contraction-induced resistance is greatest. In theory, the disruption of atherosclerotic plaques is partly due to mechanical perturbation of the plaque by foreshortening and twisting of large epicardial arteries during systole, which is diminished by heart-rate lowering (2). Heart-rate modulation is part of standard angina-prevention strategies. However, under current treatments, almost two-thirds of patients continue to experience an average of two angina episodes per week despite simultaneous use of multiple anti-anginal drugs (28). Current Therapeutic Options Although β-adrenergic blocking drugs lower heart rate and prevent angina in patients with coronary artery disease, β-blockade may be associated with adverse events, including hypotension, psychological depression, erectile dysfunction and worsening of intrinsic atrioventricular node disease (29), obstructive pulmonary diseases (30), diabetes mellitus (31), hyperlipidaemia (32) and intermittent claudication and related symptoms in patients with occlusive peripheral arterial disease (33), a relatively common concomitant of coronary artery disease. In addition, ‘rebound’ effects, sometimes fatal, have been reported when short-acting β-blockers are stopped abruptly (34). In addition, β-blockers and certain heart rate-lowering calcium antagonists have negative inotropic effects and may be inappropriate in patients with heart failure or with atrioventricular node dysfunction. Calcium antagonists can also cause constipation or peripheral oedema (35). Long-acting nitrates, which do not lower heart rate but cause reflex cardio-acceleration (36), can produce headaches or light-headedness. Continual administration of these agents can lead to pharmacological tolerance to therapeutic effects (37) and can be associated with rebound angina and vasoconstriction when stopped. In the light of these complications, alternative approaches to angina prevention have been sought, including the lowering of heart rate through novel mechanisms. The if Current as a Pharmacological Target More than three decades ago, the search began for pure heart rate-lowering agents that would prevent angina without the adverse effects of β-blockers. The discovery of the If current and If channels offered a possible approach to developing pure heart rate-lowering agents. Ivabradine has a considerable selectivity for If channel blockade (38), which allows the administration of doses that cause relatively pronounced If current inhibition and substantial heart-rate lowering. Currently, ivabradine is the only If current inhibitor in the late-stage clinical development. Ivabradine reduces the firing rate of the pacemaker cells in the sinoatrial node without affecting the duration of the action potential (20, 39), whilst acting at concentrations that have no effect on other ionic currents, making ivabradine a selective If inhibitor (40). Ivabradine blocks If channels in a concentration-dependent manner by entering the channel pore from the intracellular side (40, 41). Blockade is only possible when the If channel is open, and the magnitude of If inhibition is directly related to the frequency of channel opening. Unlike other heart rate-lowering mechanisms, direct If blockade depends on the current driving force, as block dramatically increases across the voltage interval, and on sodium concentration in the surrounding milieu (41). Thus, ivabradine would be expected to be most effective at higher heart rates, where its clinical usefulness would also be greatest. Animal Studies With Ivabradine Several experimental studies in animals, including dogs and pigs, have clarified the different beneficial effects that may be associated with pure heart-rate lowering with ivabradine. Although ivabradine and the β-blocker propranolol reduced both tachycardia during exercise and ST-segment shift to the same extent, ivabradine, unlike propranolol, does not reduce LV contractility and preserves systolic shortening fraction in ischaemic regions to a greater degree than propranolol (42). Furthermore, the recovery of contractility in ischaemic LV contractile dysfunction is significantly more rapid with ivabradine than with another β-blocker, atenolol (43, 44). Heart-rate lowering with ivabradine also dose-dependently increases diastolic time and reduces myocardial oxygen consumption, giving a linear relationship between heart rate and oxygen consumption (27). In contrast, the negative inotropic action of atenolol leads to a prolonged ejection time and, consequently, a smaller increase in diastolic time for the same reduction in heart rate compared with ivabradine (26). Ivabradine, unlike atenolol, does not depress the physiological exercise-induced acceleration of LV relaxation, so ivabradine does not show the negative lusitropic effects associated with β-blockade (45). These beneficial effects of ivabradine compared with β-blockers may be because, unlike ivabradine, β-blockers reduce If activation by decreasing sympathetic activity and cAMP formation, thereby lowering heart rate. Although the negative inotropic effects of β-blockers contribute directly to the diminution of myocardial oxygen consumption, they can also limit the increases in coronary flow otherwise associated with heart-rate lowering (26, 27). Also, myocardial relaxation occurs more slowly with β-blockade than with If current inhibition, which also minimises the impact of β-blockers on flow (45). Clinical Studies of Ivabradine in the Prevention of Angina Preclinical and clinical studies show that therapeutic doses of ivabradine are likely to be well tolerated in clinical use. Ivabradine at these doses has no negative inotropic effects in healthy volunteers (48) or in patients with LV dysfunction (49), causes no peripheral vasodilation and has no effect on the cardiac conduction system (50). Furthermore, no rebound effects with drug cessation or pharmacological tolerance with long-term use have been observed following ivabradine treatment (51). Because of their mechanism of action, If inhibitors are contraindicated in patients with intrinsic sinoatrial node disease (e.g. sick sinus syndrome); such patients were excluded from ivabradine trials. The efficacy of ivabradine monotherapy in patients with stable angina has been evaluated in two published large-scale clinical studies. The anti-anginal, anti-ischaemic effect of ivabradine, alone and in combination with other drugs, and its tolerability have been assessed in a clinical programme involving more than 5000 patients. Ivabradine 5 mg and 7.5 mg twice daily (bid) are the licensed dosages for the treatment of stable angina. Ivabradine Monotherapy A randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicentre, multinational study in 360 patients with stable angina for at least 3 months and documented coronary artery disease evaluated ivabradine in a short dose-ranging phase and in longer-term use (52). Initially, participants received either placebo or ivabradine orally twice daily for 2 weeks. The primary efficacy criteria were time to 1-mm ST-segment depression (a measure of ischaemia) and time to limiting angina during exercise tolerance testing (ETT). Patients recorded angina attacks and nitroglycerin consumption in diaries. After 2 weeks of treatment, resting heart rate was significantly slower with ivabradine compared with placebo at both peak and trough drug activities, and this reduction increased significantly with increasing dose (−4.5 and −9.5 bpm at 2.5 and 5.0 mg, respectively) (Figure 1
Blood pressure was little affected by the drug, with no hypotension at peak or trough drug effect with any dose. The only reported adverse reactions were dosage-related visual symptoms which were reported in less than 2% of patients with 5 mg orally twice daily. Such effects were generally transient, always reversible and very seldom severe enough to cause patients to voluntarily stop the drug. The results of the International Trial on the Treatment of angina with Ivabradine vs. Atenolol (INITIATIVE) have just been published (53). This randomised, double-blind study compared ivabradine with atenolol over 4 months in 939 patients with stable angina pectoris and documented coronary artery disease. Patients received either ivabradine 5 mg twice daily for 4 weeks increased to 7.5 mg twice daily for a further 3 months, or atenolol 50 mg once daily for 4 weeks increased to 100 mg once daily for a further 3 months. At 4 months, total exercise duration on a treadmill ETT at trough drug activity increased by 86.8 s with ivabradine 7.5 mg and 78.8 s with atenolol 100 mg (Figure 4 Preliminary data have been presented from a trial involving 1195 patients (55). In this double-blind, randomised study, patients received either amlodipine or ivabradine for 3 months. Ivabradine 7.5 mg bid significantly increased total exercise duration by 27.6 s. In addition, ivabradine also improved both angina, as measured by time to limiting angina and time to angina onset, and ischaemia, as measured by time to 1-mm ST-segment depression. Formal statistical testing indicated that ivabradine was non-inferior to amlodipine in preventing angina (p < 0.0001). Ivabradine significantly decreased the number of angina attacks by two-thirds and reduced use of short-acting nitrates. Ivabradine Combination Therapy In a 12-month, double-blind study, 386 patients receiving nitrates or calcium blockers for the treatment of angina were randomised to receive ivabradine 5.0 mg or 7.5 mg twice daily concomitant to their existing therapy (56). Ivabradine reduced heart rate by 10 and 12 bpm, respectively, for 5.0 and 7.5 mg doses. Moreover, the number of angina attacks was significantly reduced from baseline to month 12 in patients receiving ivabradine. Tolerability Studies Ivabradine reduces heart rate without any observed effects on myocardial contractility and does not alter the cardiac conduction system (49, 50). In one study, 14 patients received a single intravenous administration of ivabradine (0.2 mg/kg). Resting heart rate was lower by approximately 14 bpm, but no major electrophysiological parameters other than those related to the heart rate were altered (57). As expected, the QT interval was prolonged by 37.5 s. However, when QT was corrected for heart rate (QTc), there was no QTc prolongation. Ivabradine did not modify the PR and QRS intervals or the conductivity and refractoriness of the atrium, atrioventricular node, His-Purkinje system and ventricles. In a randomised, placebo-controlled study in 44 patients with LV dysfunction, a single intravenous infusion of ivabradine 0.2–0.3 mg/kg lowered the resting heart rate by more than 17%, whilst preserving fractional shortening (49). Although ivabradine is selective for If channels, it can also interact with the structurally similar retinal Ih channel. Data from clinical trials demonstrated that visual symptoms were reported in less that 2% of patients receiving the 5 mg bid dosage of ivabradine and that there were few withdrawals (<1%). Furthermore, ivabradine was not associated with any alteration of ocular structures or permanent visual disorders. In addition, most visual effects reported were mild and only occurred as occasional brief episodes, often associated with abrupt changes in light intensity. These episodes had minimal impact on patients' daily activities with no deleterious effects on their quality of life (54). Conclusion ‘Pure’ heart-rate lowering via If inhibition is clinically feasible and can effectively prevent angina with acceptable tolerability. Ivabradine effectively prevents angina and concomitantly reduces ischaemia. Ivabradine is currently the only agent shown to clinically lower heart rate with no negative inotropism or effects on conduction and contractility. References 1. Perski A, Olsson G, Landou C, et al. Minimum heart rate and coronary atherosclerosis: independent relations to global severity and rate of progression of angiographic lesions in men with myocardial infarction at a young age. Am Heart J. 1992;123:609–16. [PubMed] 2. Heidland UE, Strauer BE. 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Am Heart J. 1992 Mar; 123(3):609-16.
[Am Heart J. 1992]Circulation. 2001 Sep 25; 104(13):1477-82.
[Circulation. 2001]J Cardiovasc Pharmacol Ther. 2002 Apr; 7(2):117-29.
[J Cardiovasc Pharmacol Ther. 2002]Prog Biophys Mol Biol. 1985; 46(3):163-83.
[Prog Biophys Mol Biol. 1985]Nature. 1991 May 9; 351(6322):145-7.
[Nature. 1991]Nature. 1998 Jun 11; 393(6685):587-91.
[Nature. 1998]J Physiol. 1988 Nov; 405():477-91.
[J Physiol. 1988]J Physiol. 1991 Mar; 434():23-40.
[J Physiol. 1991]Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003 Feb; 284(2):H676-82.
[Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003]J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2004 Jan; 308(1):236-40.
[J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2004]Circulation. 2001 Sep 25; 104(13):1477-82.
[Circulation. 2001]Am J Cardiol. 1994 Aug 1; 74(3):226-31.
[Am J Cardiol. 1994]Am Fam Physician. 2000 Nov 15; 62(10):2267-74.
[Am Fam Physician. 2000]Cardiovasc Drugs Ther. 1991 Jan; 4 Suppl 6():1229-32.
[Cardiovasc Drugs Ther. 1991]J Hum Hypertens. 2000 Mar; 14(3):175-80.
[J Hum Hypertens. 2000]Am Heart J. 1988 Dec; 116(6 Pt 2):1729-34.
[Am Heart J. 1988]Drug Saf. 1993 Oct; 9(4):272-9.
[Drug Saf. 1993]Am J Cardiol. 1991 Nov 15; 68(13):1263-73.
[Am J Cardiol. 1991]Br J Pharmacol. 1994 May; 112(1):37-42.
[Br J Pharmacol. 1994]Eur J Pharmacol. 1997 Nov 19; 339(1):43-51.
[Eur J Pharmacol. 1997]Br J Pharmacol. 1996 Jun; 118(4):1051-7.
[Br J Pharmacol. 1996]J Gen Physiol. 2002 Jul; 120(1):1-13.
[J Gen Physiol. 2002]J Cardiovasc Pharmacol. 2003 Nov; 42(5):688-96.
[J Cardiovasc Pharmacol. 2003]J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2001 Dec; 299(3):1133-9.
[J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2001]Eur Heart J. 2004 Apr; 25(7):579-86.
[Eur Heart J. 2004]J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2004 Jan; 308(1):236-40.
[J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2004]Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003 Feb; 284(2):H676-82.
[Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003]Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003 Feb; 284(2):H676-82.
[Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003]J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2004 Jan; 308(1):236-40.
[J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2004]Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2002 Feb; 282(2):H672-9.
[Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2002]J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1995 Nov; 275(2):659-66.
[J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1995]Circulation. 2004 Apr 6; 109(13):1674-9.
[Circulation. 2004]Cardiology. 2003; 100(3):149-55.
[Cardiology. 2003]Drugs. 2004; 64(16):1757-65.
[Drugs. 2004]Circulation. 2003 Feb 18; 107(6):817-23.
[Circulation. 2003]Circulation. 2003 Feb 18; 107(6):817-23.
[Circulation. 2003]Circulation. 2003 Feb 18; 107(6):817-23.
[Circulation. 2003]Circulation. 2003 Feb 18; 107(6):817-23.
[Circulation. 2003]Eur Heart J. 2005 Dec; 26(23):2529-36.
[Eur Heart J. 2005]Eur Heart J. 2005 Dec; 26(23):2529-36.
[Eur Heart J. 2005]Cardiology. 2003; 100(3):149-55.
[Cardiology. 2003]Drugs. 2004; 64(16):1757-65.
[Drugs. 2004]Drugs R D. 2003; 4(2):83-9.
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